Personal information | ||||
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Full name | Victor York Richardson | |||
Born | 7 September 1894 Parkside, South Australia, Australia |
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Died | 30 October 1969 Fullarton, South Australia, Australia |
(aged 75)|||
Nickname | The Guardsman, Yorker | |||
Height | 1.81 m (5 ft 11 in) | |||
Batting style | Right-hand | |||
Bowling style | Right-arm medium pace | |||
Role | Specialist batsman | |||
Test debut (cap 119) | 19 December 1927 v England | |||
Last Test | 3 March 1936 v South Africa | |||
Domestic team information | ||||
Years | Team | |||
1918–1938 | South Australia | |||
Career statistics | ||||
Competition | Tests | First Class | ||
Matches | 19 | 184 | ||
Runs scored | 706 | 10,727 | ||
Batting average | 23.53 | 37.63 | ||
100s/50s | 1/1 | 27/47 | ||
Top score | 138 | 231 | ||
Balls bowled | 0 | 811 | ||
Wickets | 0 | 8 | ||
Bowling average | n/a | 68.12 | ||
5 wickets in innings | 0 | 0 | ||
10 wickets in match | 0 | 0 | ||
Best bowling | n/a | 3/22 | ||
Catches/stumpings | 24/0 | 211/4 | ||
Source: [[1]], 15 January 2008 |
Victor York Richardson OBE (7 September 1894 – 30 October 1969) was a leading Australian sportsman of the 1920s and 1930s, captaining the Australian cricket team and the South Australian Australian rules football team, representing Australia in baseball and South Australia in golf, winning the South Australian state tennis title and a leading local player in lacrosse, basketball and swimming.
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Richardson is most famous for his contribution to cricket, representing Australia in 19 Test matches between 1924 and 1936, including five as captain in the 1935/36 tour of South Africa.
A talented right-handed batsman and rated the best fielder in the world,[1] Richardson made his first-class debut for South Australia in the 1918/19 season. In a career that lasted twenty years (and broken by World War II) he played 184 matches for Australia and South Australia, scoring 10,724 runs, including 27 centuries and averaged 37.63 runs per inning. As a measure of his fielding capabilities, he took 211 catches (at an average of 1.15 catches per match) and even completed four stumpings as a stand-in wicketkeeper.
Richardson was Australian vice-captain for the 1932/33 English tour of Australia, known as the Bodyline series, for England's tactics of bowling fast short-pitched deliveries at the batsman's bodies.
During the series, Richardson exclaimed to his team mates "which of you bastards called (Harold) Larwood a bastard instead of this bastard (Douglas Jardine)?”[2]
Richardson played his final Test against South Africa at Durban on 28 February 1936, aged 41 years 178 days. Only ten Australians have played Test cricket at an older age.[3]
Following his retirement from cricket, Richardson was appointed South Australian coach in September 1949, replacing Arthur Richardson.[4]
To honour his memory and the impact he made for his state, the South Australian Cricket Association dedicated the "Victor Richardson Gates" at the Adelaide Oval and the road leading to them in his honour.[5]
Richardson made his senior Australian rules football debut for Sturt Football Club in the South Australian National Football League in 1915 and in a career interrupted by World War I, played 114 games for Sturt, kicking 23 goals.
Richardson was a gifted sportsman and excelled in other sports besides cricket and Australian rules football, including baseball (national and state representative), golf (state representative), tennis (state title winner), lacrosse, basketball and swimming.
After retiring from first-class cricket he went on to become a respected radio commentator, forging a partnership with renowned fromer English Test captain Arthur Gilligan.[6]
In March 1949 Richardson announced that he would seek Liberal and Country League (LCL) pre-selection for the new federal Division of Kingston, situated in Adelaide's south.[7] At the time Richardson lived on Richmond Road, Westbourne Park, which was located in the electorate.[7]
He was a grandfather to three future Australian Test cricketers Ian Chappell, Greg Chappell (who both also captained Australia at Test level) and Trevor Chappell.
Richardson was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) on 10 June 1954 for his services to cricket, including his presidency of the Country Carnival Cricket Association.[8]
Preceded by Bill Woodfull |
Australian Test cricket captains 1935/6 |
Succeeded by Don Bradman |
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